| Occupational
Safety and Health Profile for Seychelles, 2006 |
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| Study papers
made on the Ethiopian Cotton and Textile Sectors |
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| Ethiopian Cotton-Textile
Sector (power point) >> |
| Decent Work Deficits in the Ethiopian
Cotton sector (.pdf) >> |
| The Impact of the Recent Changes
in the International Trade Environment: The End of the Multi
Fibre Agreement (.pdf) >> |
| Mapping Participants in the Cotton
and Textile Sector (.pdf) >> |
| Productivity Constraints in the
Garment Sector (power point) >> |
| Decent Work Country Programme
for Ethiopia - A Case for the Cotton and Textiles Sector, ILO
Intervention and Support (.pdf) >> |
| Decent Work Country Programme
(DWCP) for Ethiopia: Proposed Areas of Intervention in the Cotton
& Textiles Sector – Making it Competitive (.pdf)
>> |
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| Doing business
in Tigray: Case studies of women entrepreneurs with disabilities in
Ethiopia |
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women with disabilities
are engaged in different areas of work to support themselves as well
others who are dependant on them. They tell us of their achievements
as well as challenges they face in their lives. Full
text |
Doing business in Addis
Ababa: Case studies of women entrepreneurs with disabilities in
Ethiopia |
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women with disabilities are engaged
in different areas of work to support themselves as well others who
are dependant on them. They tell us of their achievements as well
as challenges they face in their lives. Full
text |
Ethiopia:
An Assessment of the International Labour Migration
Situation, The Case of Female Migrants |
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is based on a series of country case
studies, which include Ethiopia, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Italy, Japan,
Nicaragua, Nigeria, the Philippines, Sri Lanka and the United Arab
Emirates. The focus is on the situation of the women migrant workers
in their families, workplaces, communities and societies in sending
and receiving countries and also on the initiatives, policies and
programmes, “good” and “bad” practices implemented
by government, private recruitment and employment agencies and a wide
range of social actors to assist and protect women migrants against
exploitation and abuse and to prevent them from being trafficked.
Full text |
Ethiopia: Child Domestic
Workers in Addis Ababa; A Rapid Assessment |
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The study identifies
and analyses the characteristics of the working and living conditions
of child domestic labourers in Addis Ababa, using rapid assessment
method. It focuses on child domestics who are paid wages and those
who are not on fixed payment arrangement, addressing their working
conditions, their access to health and education, social activities,
their mental and physical developments and others. Full
text |
| Ethiopia:
Child Labour Survey Report, 2001 |
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establishes demographic
and socio-economic characteristics of children in Ethiopia; assesses
the working situation of children and the influence on their education
, health, physical and mental development; examines the characteristics
of the sectors that employ most children; identify where and how the
children have been working and the factors that led the children to
work or families to put children to work; and assesses the health
and welfare status of the children. Full
text |
| Jobs,
Gender and Small Entrepreneurs in Africa - Women Entrepreneurs
in Ethiopia |
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covers a wide range of existing literature
on the micro and small enterprise (MSE) sector and on gender in general
and on women entrepreneurs specifically. It reviews the importance
of the sector; the factors that influence the growth and development
of MSEs; the experience of women entrepreneurs in Ethiopian MSEs;
issues for women when starting and expanding their enterprises, as
well as identifying certain other key issue that require further research.
Full text |
| Starting
point: Exploratory surveys in Addis Ababa and Tigray Region |
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a new approach
to technical cooperation by the ILO in the field of disability - develop
an effective strategy by whi2ch women with disability can optimise
their income-earning potential and escape from poverty. Full
text |
| Vulnerable
Livelihoods: People's Security Survey of Urban Households in Ethiopia |
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is based on a survey of households undertaken
in the last quarter of 2001 for the International Labour Organisation
(ILO) as part of the project entitled People's Security Survey (PSS).
The main objective of PSS was to try to capture people's perceptions
and normative values of 'livelihood' security. The findings of the
study reveal a population that is fearful and anxious about its basic
subsistence, which is dependent on low and insecure income, inadequate
social services, a shrinking labour market and that is faced with
gloomy prospects. Full
text |